The 19 companies, the taxpayer money already invested in them, and the
results of the stress tests are shown below. The "capital buffer"
is the amount of money regulators decided each institution required to
withstand the downturn envisioned under the tests. In all but one
case (GMAC),
the companies were able to satisfy this requirement by raising capital
privately.

Although they are included in
the list because they are technically organized as banks, the companies include
one insurance company (MetLife) and a
few companies that only recently converted to banks (such as American
Express).